It's now Tuesday evening, 48 hours since Rowshan made his first call. Let us examine his performance. I will make no comment except factual remarks based on his calls published by himself on this very thread, and the market results:
He made three calls overall: the market should be bought on Monday and would move up from the open; oil stocks would sell off Monday; and Tuesday would also be a profitable day to buy the market.
"Rowshan is calling for a higher stock market monday. If you're a "trader" this means you buy and go long monday's action."
SPY opened at 132.09. Closed at 131.45. Net loss of 0.64 or 0.48% not including transactions costs and slippage. Rowshan was wrong.
"it looks to me like the oil stocks will be down tomorrow, so by Rowshans extrapolation: oil stocks down, market up."
OIH opened at 214.67, closed at 224.21, up 9.54 or +4.44%. Rowshan was wrong.
"Tuesday will be another green day for the S&P."
S&P closed at 1314.29, down 0.28% on the day. Rowshan wrong again.
So, let's review his performance. Assuming no leverage was used, he had:
0.48% loss on SPY Monday.
4.44% loss on OIH Monday.
0.28% loss on SPY Tuesday.
Total performance over 2 trading days = -5.2%. This works out at an annualized rate of return of -99.84% before transactions costs and slippage. Win rate was 0/3.
Those are the facts, ladies and gentlemen. Draw whatever conclusions you wish. I will now leave this thread, as I believe the FACTS speak for themselves.